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News around the web: 10 Ways to Spot an E-Mail Scam

By Erik Orejuela, TechSpot.com
Published: October 28, 2009, 10:41 AM EST
10 Ways to Spot an E-Mail Scam @ Switched
Apple shops tablet around Australia @ SMH.com.au
Cisco revs its acquisition engine @ CNet
Controversial couple dominates U.S. medical tourism @ Reuters
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User Comments (8)

Post a comment
treeski
on October 28, 2009
11:25 AM
The E-Mail scam article is very helpful. I personally was aware of most of the issues it mentioned, but I will be passing it on to my less "techy" acquaintances

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TomSEA
on October 28, 2009
12:12 PM
Agreed. My first reaction was "who needs coaching to spot an e-mail scam? They're all so obvious..." But what is obvious to me is most definitely not obvious to other people. I'll also be passing it on.

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jet6130
on October 28, 2009
9:02 PM
Useful, nothing that I didn't know, but sending it to family members...these things should be second nature to internet users. Like locking your car doors or not leaving you wallet on a park bench.

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ET3D
on October 29, 2009
1:35 AM
It's funny how effective the "you've won" scams are. Everyone wants to win a million dollars, so they're willing to at least hope that's not a scam.

They forgot to mention the "to". Scams will not use your name or nick as a recipient. Some legit marketing mails don't use it either, but most often they do.

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SoulSeeker
on October 29, 2009
8:03 AM
TomSEA said:
My first reaction was "who needs coaching to spot an e-mail scam? They're all so obvious..."
I second that. And I still wonder how so many people can fall for them. I mean seriously... tech savvy or not, everyone knows the saying "If it sounds to good to be true, it probably is"

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burty117
on October 29, 2009
9:29 AM
DUDE! look at the apple tablet! that looks cool! i bet thats going to cost an arm and 2 legs =)

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elroacho72
on October 30, 2009
11:39 PM
10 Ways to Spot an E-Mail Scam
Is what I needed . I sent it to all of the people who have sent me stuff like; Microsoft and aol will pay you to forward this email to as many people you can and your get payed for each email. There is no nice way of saying your stupid for falling for that crap.Hopefully this will help it's a good read.

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aestarvirus
on November 2, 2009
5:31 AM
this article is worth reading for. personally, my hotmail account was recently bombarded by lots of scams and fraud saying that i won this and i won that contest which at the first place i didn't entered before.

i think that email scam can be easily detected by merely using our common sence. but i must admit that i fell on one of the hot scam before during the times that i'm still ignorant on computers and internet browsing.

one way also to detect a fraudulent email scam is if they are soliciting your personal data like occupation, nationality and even your full name name, which they should have known for the first place.

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